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Early Bird Report: Matt Ryan approaching rarified air

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Matt Ryan has already made his mark on this history books this season, surpassing Warren Moon and moving into the NFL's top 10 in career passing yards. There's a chance, with an excellent game on Thursday night, that Ryan could again make history in front of a national audience.

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With 346 passing yards on Thursday, Ryan will have amassed 50,000 in his NFL career, a feat that only nine others have accomplished in the league's history. Here are the nine quarterbacks on that list, currently:

  • Drew Brees: 76,044 yards*
  • Tom Brady: 73,456 yards*
  • Peyton Manning: 71,940 yards
  • Brett Favre: 71,838 yards
  • Dan Marino: 61,361 yards
  • Philip Rivers: 57,825 yards*
  • Ben Roethlisberger: 56,545 yards*
  • Eli Manning: 56,537 yards*
  • John Elway: 51,475 yards

*Player is still active

ESPN's Vaughn McClure spoke with Ryan about what the milestone would mean to him and how he would reflect upon it. McClure's piece also includes quotes from other notable quarterbacks on that list like Favre and Brees, Ryan's opponent on Thursday, about the Falcons' starting quarterback. For now, Ryan is busy preparing for his Thanksgiving matchup against the Saints, but he'll continue to forge his legacy in the process.

"Everybody's shooting for that," Ryan told McClure of finishing his career as the NFL's all-time leading passer. "Anybody that tells you they're not is lying. Of course you're shooting for that. Of course you'd want to be recognized that way. But at the same time, there's a long time to go between now and then.

"You need a lot of luck, and I think all the guys up there on the list would say the same thing. You've got to work really, really hard, but you've got to be lucky, too, to be able to continue to play and not have things derail your career because every time you're out there, something could kind of change that narrative. It could change in one play. So, I think you have to be lucky to get there, too. But I feel good, man. I feel like I've got a lot to go, a long way to go from here."

To read the rest of McClure's piece, click here.

Here are some other articles for Falcons fans to check out today:

Pro Football Focus: Week 12 Team of the Week

Desmond Trufant is on a tear in his first two games back from a toe injury that sidelined him from Week 6 through Week 10. Against the Panthers and the Buccaneers, Trufant has 10 tackles and two interceptions.

Trufant easily jumped Mike Evans' route on the Buccaneers' first pass play on Sunday and picked off Jameis Winston. For that play and his overall performance against Tampa Bay, Trufant was named to Pro Football Focus' Week 12 Team of the Week.

"Trufant allowed just one reception from three targets for eight yards and recorded a pass breakup," PFF writes. "However, his best play was his interception in coverage against Mike Evans. He jumped in front of an ill-advised Jameis Winston pass for an easy pick early in the contest."

To see the rest of PFF's team of the week, click here.

ESPN: Week 12 NFL takeaways

On a greater scale, Sunday's loss dealt a big blow to the post-bye momentum the Falcons had gained. It also put any playoff possibilities on life support. Given the renewed sense of urgency and energy Atlanta had showed against New Orleans and Carolina, this was not a game many saw coming.

"The Falcons blew a golden opportunity to build off the momentum from a two-game winning streak," Vaughn McClure writes in his takeaway for ESPN. "When the Falcons failed to score touchdowns after Matt Ryan's early 53-yard connection to tight end Jaeden Graham and after defensive back Desmond Trufant's interception, you knew it was going to be a long day. The Falcons looked more like the team that started the season 1-7 than like a team on a mission to save its season and coach Dan Quinn's job. Now at 3-8, the playoffs are a far-fetched possibility."

To read the rest of ESPN's takeaways from Week 12, click here.

AJC: Falcons take a step back

By losing to the Buccaneers, the Falcons now have only the smallest probability of making the postseason. The hole Atlanta dug prior to the bye week will likely ultimately prove impossible to climb out of. In his column for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Mark Bradley writes that he wasn't stunned by the Falcons' performance on Sunday, because it was reminiscent of the team that dug itself this hole in the first place.

"The Atlanta Falcons lost Sunday, which meant clarity won," Bradley writes. "The two-game blip was revealed as just that. They're 3-8. They cannot win the NFC South. For them to make the playoffs, Green Bay must lose the rest of its games while the Falcons win out. There's also a scenario in which Minnesota loses out and Chicago rises from 5-6 to 8-8 and triggers a three-way tiebreaker, but that's it. As of today, Football Outsiders puts the Falcons' postseason odds at 0.0 percent."

To read the rest of Bradley's column, click here.

NFL.com: What we learned from Week 12

Despite the way the Falcons' defense had been playing in the two weeks leading up to Sunday's game against the Buccaneers, Tampa Bay's offense is always capable of catching fire for a weekend. That's exactly what happened in the Falcons' 35-22 loss to the Buccaneers.

Jameis Winston did toss two interceptions, but he also threw for 313 yards and three touchdowns. Winston also ran for 38 yards as part of a Tampa Bay ground game that churned out 133 yards against Atlanta. Perhaps more surprising was the Falcons' inability to keep pace on offense, as NFL.com's Jelani Scott breaks down in greater detail in his post-game takeaways.

"Considering that Winston and Matt Ryan were fourth and fifth, respectively, in pass YPG and are tied for the most 300-plus yard passing games with seven, this game was set up to be a slobberknocker," Scott writes. "It was not. Ryan (23-of-46, 271 yards, INT) was simply not up to par, registering his lowest completion percentage (50.0) of 2019 and a season-high six sacks (14 QB hits). One of those sacks turned into a six-yard Ndamukong Suh scoop-and-score after a strip by Jason Pierre-Paul late in the fourth when the game was essentially out of reach. Any QB in the league has the chance at a good day with Julio Jones on the field but, even with the receiver's brief injury scare, this was another low-key Jones showing; he had five catches (nine targets) for 68 yards and finished without a TD for the eighth straight game. Props to Bucs CB Carlton Davis (five PDs, five tackles, INT) for his above-average coverage against Jones in his second game back from injury. Jones' 121.1 rec YPG versus Tampa is the most by any WR against an opponent in the Super Bowl era, per NFL Research but Tampa's D was hellbent on preventing a breakout game. The Falcons' run game was M.I.A. in its second week without Devonta Freeman (19/57/1); Pierre-Paul, Suh, Vea and linebackers Devin White (2.0 sacks, eight total tackles) and Shaquil Barrett (sack, five QB hits, FF) were all instrumental in those efforts."

To read the rest of Scott's takeaways from the game, click here.

AJC: Falcons return to form

The Falcons' loss to the Buccaneers felt similar to many of the team's other defeats in 2019. That is to say it felt nothing like the two complete performances Atlanta had put together leading up to Sunday. In his weekend column for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Michael Cunningham wrote that he didn't put too much stock into the post-bye turnaround.

"After providing fresh material for two weeks, the Falcons came home and played a rerun for their fans," Cunningham writes. "The 35-22 loss to the Buccaneers on Sunday looked much like the six consecutive losses that sank the season. It looked nothing like the spirited victories at the Saints and Panthers.

"The loss means the Falcons (3-8) will have consecutive non-winning seasons for the first time since 2014-2015. It confirmed that they are a bad team that played over their heads for a couple of weeks. The Bucs had the same record as the Falcons and didn't play particularly well, but still won by two touchdowns as 3-1/2-point underdogs."

To read the rest of Cunningham's column, click here.

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